
Some breast cancer patients with positive sentinel lymph nodes have factors associated with a low probability of having any other positive nodes and may therefore be able to safely skip completion axillary dissection, new data show.

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Some breast cancer patients with positive sentinel lymph nodes have factors associated with a low probability of having any other positive nodes and may therefore be able to safely skip completion axillary dissection, new data show.

Two new genomic assays may provide prognostic and predictive information for individual patients with breast cancer, thereby helping to guide treatment decisions, according to data from a pair of studies presented at SABCS.

More data have emerged to suggest that MRI is more sensitive than mammography, though less specific, in screening women at high risk for breast cancer occurrence. Moreover, annual screening picks up a high number of ductal carcinomas in situ (DCIS), but also identifies tumors that are already large at diagnosis among BRCA1 mutation carriers.

Women with breast cancer who take adjuvant tamoxifen for 10 years have a lower risk of recurrence than their counterparts who take it for 5 years, although the difference is thus far small, according to early results of the ATLAS (Adjuvant Tamoxifen, Longer Against Shorter) trial presented at SABCS (abstract 48).

A median follow-up of 100 months has shown continued benefit for anastrozole (Arimidex) as compared with tamoxifen in a study of postmenopausal women with hormone receptor-positive tumors.

The HER network is robust, complex, redundant, and adaptable. It provides proliferation and survival signals to a subset of breast tumors.

The combination of capecitabine (Xeloda) and ixabepilone (Ixempra) appears to be robust in patients with the triple-negative breast cancer phenotype. In heavily pretreated metastatic breast cancer patients, the regimen yielded an overall response rate of 27% and median progression-free survival of 4.1 months, according to a subset analysis of 187 patients from a larger randomized phase III trial of capecitabine with and without ixabepilone.

When used as adjuvant therapy for node-positive breast cancer, the combination of high-dose chemotherapy (HDC) and stem cell transplantation modestly improves relapse-free survival relative to standard-dose chemotherapy (SDC). But it offers at best minimal benefit in terms of overall survival, according to a meta-analysis presented at SABCS.

Anthracyclines are widely used in the adjuvant treatment of breast cancer, but this practice is being questioned as emerging data show benefits to be restricted to certain subsets of patients.

Middle-aged women today are about half as likely as their counterparts 25 years ago to die from breast cancer, thanks in large part to the collective effects of modern therapies, according to new data reported at SABCS. Results of the 2005-2006 update of the worldwide overview presented by Richard Peto, PhD, on behalf of the Early Breast Cancer Trialists’ Collaborative Group were based on data from roughly 350,000 women and 400 randomized trials.

After breast-conserving surgery, a shorter radiotherapy regimen using accelerated hypofractionated whole-breast irradiation (AHWBI) is as effective and cosmetically acceptable as standard whole-breast irradiation (SWBI), according to the 12-year follow-up of a study by the Ontario Clinical Oncology Group.

Compared with standard treatment with doxorubicin/cyclophosphamide (AC), four cycles of docetaxel (Taxotere) plus cyclophosphamide (TC) improved both disease-free and overall survival in the extended follow-up and analysis of US Oncology Adjuvant Trial 9735.